It’s time for “Confusing Words of the Week” where I take a set of two or three words that get confused and give you definitions and try to give you a memory trick to help you remember when to use which word. If you have words that confuse you, use the Ask PTB tab on the website or send an email to proofthatblog@gmail.com and they may appear here soon!
This week’s words are:
Defuse – to make less harmful
- The officers worked to defuse the bomb
Diffuse – (v) to spread; (adj.) wordy, badly organized
- She prepared a diffuse report of the accident
- He wanted to diffuse the lavender in his bedroom.
Memory tips:
Defuse – to De-Fuse the situation
Diffuse – make a difference in the atmosphere (to spread) and to make it difficult to read (wordy, badly organized)
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I learned a very interesting fact while on a tour in Disneyland last week. It seems that a committee was appointed on June 11, 1776, to draft the Declaration of Independence. Thomas Jefferson took the laboring oar and did the initial draft. Forty-seven alterations were made to that draft before it was presented to Congress on June 28. Congress voted for independence on July 2–and then continued to edit the document, making 39 more edits before voting for adoption of the Declaration of Independence on July 4. Although Mr. Jefferson did not agree with many of those final edits, they were made and the Declaration was printed late in the day on July 4. Thus, July 4 is Independence Day, even though the vote approving independence was made on July 2.
It’s time for a review of recent blog posts just in case you’ve missed them. We call this Replay Thursday. Here are posts from Proof That proofreading blog and 60 Is The New 60 blog during the past week.
There comes a time when some of the office slang or “babblespeak” becomes irritating. Here are some words and phrases to stop using at work: